Debate about the relationship between environmental limits and economic growth has been taking place for several decades. These arguments have re-emerged with greater intensity following advances in the understanding of the economics of climate change, increases in resource and oil prices and the re-emergence of the discussion about peak oil. These issues are addressed here by Cameron Hepburn, He is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow of New College, Oxford.
According to Professor Hepburn, the economic pessimism created by the great recession of 2008-2012 has put the spotlight back on the prospects for economic growth and invariably, the impact on the impact and climate change. But does the pursuit of growth necessitate a trade-off with the environment. In the interview ,Hepburn offers a conceptual and synthetic analysis of the relationship between economic growth and environmental limits, including those imposed by climate change. It explores two related questions. Will environmental limits, including limits on the climate system, slow or even halt economic growth? If not, how will the nature of economic growth have to shift?
To be clear, Cameron Hepburn does not envisage a ‘zero growth’ world as being necessary for us to live within environmental limits, nor does he see economic growth as a problem. Rather, he maintains that stopping economic growth (which is measured in terms of value) is neither necessary nor desirable. Indeed, as far as meeting environmental challenges is concerned, it would be counterproductive; recessions have slowed and in some cases derailed efforts to adopt cleaner modes of production. Rather, large leaps in clean technology, triggering a structural shift in the way we produce and consume energy, are required. This is a ‘green growth’ rather than a ‘no growth’ world. The continuation of growth in value to humans is consistent with us living within the material constraints imposed by a finite (if very large) planet, provided that we continue to expand the "intellectual economy" through innovation, technology development, an increased focus on services and, more fundamentally, the art of living, all of which he discusses in the interview below.

published:07 Nov 2015

views:6999

Modern human civilisation has been built upon energy from carbon-intensive fossil fuels. We are now on the cusp of a once-in-a-civilisation transition to a net zero carbon society. The outcome of this transition could be a world that is cleaner, safer, smarter, more technologically advanced, and more prosperous. Getting there will necessarily involve structural transformation in many economic sectors. But progress to a zero carbon society is far slower than what is required to eliminate even the worst climate risks.
In this talk, ProfessorDoyne Farmer and Professor Cameron Hepburn, Directors of the OxfordMartinProgramme on the Post-Carbon Transition, discuss new research drawing on multiple disciplines to identify the sensitive intervention points where actions can deliver impact at scale and accelerate the achievement of global net-zero emissions. They will consider those with interests in resisting or delaying the transition, including nations, capital and labour at risk of being ‘stranded’. They will discuss a suite of simulation models that could enable richer explorations of the various possible routes to the post-carbon society, and to help identify the sensitive intervention points.
Join in on Twitter #oxmartintalks
Oxford Martin School,
University of Oxford
www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk

Pioneering global research commissioned by The ClimateInstitute reveals that Australia's major trading partners have higher direct and indirect carbon pricing in their electricity generation sectors in order to drive clean energy investments. The report's key author, Dr Cameron Hepburn of Vivid Economics, summarises the findings of this groundbreaking study.

Cameron Hepburn is co-founder of ClimateBridge, based in London. He is very well known in Europe for his expertise in climate change economics, business and policy. Cameron is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow at New College, Oxford.
Cameron previously worked for McKinsey & Company in Australia and Europe and Shell Australia on environmental management. He serves as a Member of the Economics Advisory Group to the UK Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change, the Academic Panel for UK DEFRA, as a Director of Vivid Economics Ltd, and on several other advisory boards. Cameron holds first class degrees in law and chemical engineering from Melbourne University, and a masters and doctorate in economics from Oxford University, where he studied as a Rhodes Scholar.
He has over 30 peer-reviewed publications in a range of disciplines, reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of the challenges in the resources and energy sectors. He has particular expertise in environmental and climate-change economics, with research interests in the theory and implementation of emissions trading, the economics and ethics of cost-benefit analysis, green growth and behavioural economics.
Cameron has provided advice on energy and environmental policy to governments and international institutions around the world. He is a member of the Economics Advisory Group (with Lord Stern and Professor Helm) to the UK Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change. He served for almost a decade as a member of the Academic Panel, in the UK Department of Environment, Food and RuralAffairs and the Department of Energy and Climate Change. He has advised governments (e.g. China, India, UK, Australia) and international institutions (e.g. OECD, UN organisations) on energy, resources and environmental policy.
He has also had an entrepreneurial career, co-founding two successful environmental businesses and investing in several other start-ups. In 2006, with Alex Wyatt he co-founded Climate Bridge, a developer of clean energy projects in China and around the world, with offices in four countries. Also in 2006, with Robin Smale he co-founded Vivid Economics, a boutique economics consultancy where he has worked with private sector (and government) clients on strategy in relation to market structure and resource, energy and environmental issues. He is an investor in Purpose, a firm that uses digital technology to create mass consumer movements, and DoSustainability, a specialist electronic publisher.
Held at the iconic Sydney Opera House on 14 September, The AdvanceGlobalAustralianSummit and Awards celebrated international Australians who exhibit remarkable talent, exceptional vision and ambition. The Awards are the only of its kind to recognise the contributions of the one million Australians living abroad, and those who have returned home. More information at www.globalaustralianawards.com.
For the 2015 Advance Global Australian Awards and Summit we were delighted to partner with Australia Channel, the international service of Sky News Australia designed to meet the needs of expats wanting the freshest news from home, and to highlight the benefits of Australia as a business, tourism and investment destination. More information at www.australiachannel.com.au.

Martin School

Located in Lexington, Kentucky, the Martin School prepares students for leadership in public service. The Martin School offers graduate degrees in public administration and public policy. U.S. News & World Report presently ranks the Martin School 2nd in Public Finance and Budgeting among public affairs programs and the National Research Council ranks the Ph.D. program between 4th and 11th overall.

History

The Martin School is named for James W. Martin, public servant and distinguished scholar of government finance and economics. Originally named the James W. Martin Center, the school admitted its first class in 1976. The name was changed to the James W. Martin School of Public Administration in 1984. In 1985, the school was designated a "Center of Excellence" by the University of Kentucky. The name was officially changed in 1994 to the James W. Martin School of Public Policy and Administration to better reflect the scope of the school's academic and public service pursuits.

Oxford Martin School

The Oxford Martin School is a research and policy unit based in the Social Sciences Division of the University of Oxford. It was founded in June 2005 as the James Martin 21st Century School. It is named after its benefactor, James Martin, author of the books The Wired Society and The Meaning of the 21st Century.

Research

The School invests in research tackling "the most pressing global challenges and opportunities of the 21st century" It takes a multi-disciplinary approach to issues such as climate change, migration, and the future of humanity.

The School's Director, Professor Ian Goldin, took up his position in September 2006. In 2010, the School announced the successful outcome of a $100 million matched funding scheme that saw the number of research programmes in the School more than double.

In September 2012, the School launched the Oxford Martin Commission for Future Generations, an interdisciplinary group looking at global issues such as cybersecurity, climate change, and political transparency. The Commission, chaired by Pascal Lamy, reported in 2013, making fifteen proposals on how to respond to these trends. These included some expansions of existing projects and some new proposals.

Economic Growth, Climate Change and Environmental Limits

Debate about the relationship between environmental limits and economic growth has been taking place for several decades. These arguments have re-emerged with greater intensity following advances in the understanding of the economics of climate change, increases in resource and oil prices and the re-emergence of the discussion about peak oil. These issues are addressed here by Cameron Hepburn, He is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow of New College, Oxford.
According to Professor Hepburn, the economic pessimism created by the great recession of 2008-2012 has put the spotlight back on the prospects for economic growth and invariably, the impact on the impact and climate change. But does the pursuit of growth necessitate a trade-off with the environment. In the interview ,Hepburn offers a conceptual and synthetic analysis of the relationship between economic growth and environmental limits, including those imposed by climate change. It explores two related questions. Will environmental limits, including limits on the climate system, slow or even halt economic growth? If not, how will the nature of economic growth have to shift?
To be clear, Cameron Hepburn does not envisage a ‘zero growth’ world as being necessary for us to live within environmental limits, nor does he see economic growth as a problem. Rather, he maintains that stopping economic growth (which is measured in terms of value) is neither necessary nor desirable. Indeed, as far as meeting environmental challenges is concerned, it would be counterproductive; recessions have slowed and in some cases derailed efforts to adopt cleaner modes of production. Rather, large leaps in clean technology, triggering a structural shift in the way we produce and consume energy, are required. This is a ‘green growth’ rather than a ‘no growth’ world. The continuation of growth in value to humans is consistent with us living within the material constraints imposed by a finite (if very large) planet, provided that we continue to expand the "intellectual economy" through innovation, technology development, an increased focus on services and, more fundamentally, the art of living, all of which he discusses in the interview below.

Modern human civilisation has been built upon energy from carbon-intensive fossil fuels. We are now on the cusp of a once-in-a-civilisation transition to a net zero carbon society. The outcome of this transition could be a world that is cleaner, safer, smarter, more technologically advanced, and more prosperous. Getting there will necessarily involve structural transformation in many economic sectors. But progress to a zero carbon society is far slower than what is required to eliminate even the worst climate risks.
In this talk, ProfessorDoyne Farmer and Professor Cameron Hepburn, Directors of the OxfordMartinProgramme on the Post-Carbon Transition, discuss new research drawing on multiple disciplines to identify the sensitive intervention points where actions can deliver impact at scale and accelerate the achievement of global net-zero emissions. They will consider those with interests in resisting or delaying the transition, including nations, capital and labour at risk of being ‘stranded’. They will discuss a suite of simulation models that could enable richer explorations of the various possible routes to the post-carbon society, and to help identify the sensitive intervention points.
Join in on Twitter #oxmartintalks
Oxford Martin School,
University of Oxford
www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk

5:32

Ideas Labs | An Economic Model Inspired by Nature | Cameron Hepburn

Ideas Labs | An Economic Model Inspired by Nature | Cameron Hepburn

Ideas Labs | An Economic Model Inspired by Nature | Cameron Hepburn

Putting a Price Tag on Pollution - Dr Cameron Hepburn

Pioneering global research commissioned by The ClimateInstitute reveals that Australia's major trading partners have higher direct and indirect carbon pricing in their electricity generation sectors in order to drive clean energy investments. The report's key author, Dr Cameron Hepburn of Vivid Economics, summarises the findings of this groundbreaking study.

Cameron Hepburn is co-founder of ClimateBridge, based in London. He is very well known in Europe for his expertise in climate change economics, business and policy. Cameron is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow at New College, Oxford.
Cameron previously worked for McKinsey & Company in Australia and Europe and Shell Australia on environmental management. He serves as a Member of the Economics Advisory Group to the UK Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change, the Academic Panel for UK DEFRA, as a Director of Vivid Economics Ltd, and on several other advisory boards. Cameron holds first class degrees in law and chemical engineering from Melbourne University, and a masters and doctorate in economics from Oxford University, where he studied as a Rhodes Scholar.
He has over 30 peer-reviewed publications in a range of disciplines, reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of the challenges in the resources and energy sectors. He has particular expertise in environmental and climate-change economics, with research interests in the theory and implementation of emissions trading, the economics and ethics of cost-benefit analysis, green growth and behavioural economics.
Cameron has provided advice on energy and environmental policy to governments and international institutions around the world. He is a member of the Economics Advisory Group (with Lord Stern and Professor Helm) to the UK Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change. He served for almost a decade as a member of the Academic Panel, in the UK Department of Environment, Food and RuralAffairs and the Department of Energy and Climate Change. He has advised governments (e.g. China, India, UK, Australia) and international institutions (e.g. OECD, UN organisations) on energy, resources and environmental policy.
He has also had an entrepreneurial career, co-founding two successful environmental businesses and investing in several other start-ups. In 2006, with Alex Wyatt he co-founded Climate Bridge, a developer of clean energy projects in China and around the world, with offices in four countries. Also in 2006, with Robin Smale he co-founded Vivid Economics, a boutique economics consultancy where he has worked with private sector (and government) clients on strategy in relation to market structure and resource, energy and environmental issues. He is an investor in Purpose, a firm that uses digital technology to create mass consumer movements, and DoSustainability, a specialist electronic publisher.
Held at the iconic Sydney Opera House on 14 September, The AdvanceGlobalAustralianSummit and Awards celebrated international Australians who exhibit remarkable talent, exceptional vision and ambition. The Awards are the only of its kind to recognise the contributions of the one million Australians living abroad, and those who have returned home. More information at www.globalaustralianawards.com.
For the 2015 Advance Global Australian Awards and Summit we were delighted to partner with Australia Channel, the international service of Sky News Australia designed to meet the needs of expats wanting the freshest news from home, and to highlight the benefits of Australia as a business, tourism and investment destination. More information at www.australiachannel.com.au.

Audrey Hepburn... by her Son. Part 4 of 4

An intimate portrait of Audrey Hepburn, by her son Sean Hepburn-Ferrer. Featuring many private photographs as well as clips from all her memorable films.
Please visit the Youtube channels of my three official web sites on another of Britain's greats, Leonard Rossiter, including the authorised Rising Damp and Reginald Perrin web sites:
http://www.youtube.com/user/OfficialRossiter
http://www.youtube.com/user/leonardross
Please visit my Two Ronnies Youtube channel:
http://www.youtube.com/user/2ronnies

Modern human civilisation has been built upon energy from carbon-intensive fossil fuels. We are now on the cusp of a once-in-a-civilisation transition to a net zero carbon society. The outcome of this transition could be a world that is cleaner, safer, smarter, more technologically advanced, and more prosperous. Getting there will necessarily involve structural transformation in many economic sectors. But progress to a zero carbon society is far slower than what is required to eliminate even the worst climate risks.
In this talk, ProfessorDoyne Farmer and Professor Cameron Hepburn, Directors of the OxfordMartinProgramme on the Post-Carbon Transition, discuss new research drawing on multiple disciplines to identify the sensitive intervention points where actions can deliver impact at s...

published: 09 Nov 2017

Ideas Labs | An Economic Model Inspired by Nature | Cameron Hepburn

Putting a Price Tag on Pollution - Dr Cameron Hepburn

Pioneering global research commissioned by The ClimateInstitute reveals that Australia's major trading partners have higher direct and indirect carbon pricing in their electricity generation sectors in order to drive clean energy investments. The report's key author, Dr Cameron Hepburn of Vivid Economics, summarises the findings of this groundbreaking study.

Audrey Hepburn... by her Son. Part 4 of 4

An intimate portrait of Audrey Hepburn, by her son Sean Hepburn-Ferrer. Featuring many private photographs as well as clips from all her memorable films.
Please visit the Youtube channels of my three official web sites on another of Britain's greats, Leonard Rossiter, including the authorised Rising Damp and Reginald Perrin web sites:
http://www.youtube.com/user/OfficialRossiter
http://www.youtube.com/user/leonardross
Please visit my Two Ronnies Youtube channel:
http://www.youtube.com/user/2ronnies

Economic Growth, Climate Change and Environmental Limits

Debate about the relationship between environmental limits and economic growth has been taking place for several decades. These arguments have re-emerged with g...

Debate about the relationship between environmental limits and economic growth has been taking place for several decades. These arguments have re-emerged with greater intensity following advances in the understanding of the economics of climate change, increases in resource and oil prices and the re-emergence of the discussion about peak oil. These issues are addressed here by Cameron Hepburn, He is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow of New College, Oxford.
According to Professor Hepburn, the economic pessimism created by the great recession of 2008-2012 has put the spotlight back on the prospects for economic growth and invariably, the impact on the impact and climate change. But does the pursuit of growth necessitate a trade-off with the environment. In the interview ,Hepburn offers a conceptual and synthetic analysis of the relationship between economic growth and environmental limits, including those imposed by climate change. It explores two related questions. Will environmental limits, including limits on the climate system, slow or even halt economic growth? If not, how will the nature of economic growth have to shift?
To be clear, Cameron Hepburn does not envisage a ‘zero growth’ world as being necessary for us to live within environmental limits, nor does he see economic growth as a problem. Rather, he maintains that stopping economic growth (which is measured in terms of value) is neither necessary nor desirable. Indeed, as far as meeting environmental challenges is concerned, it would be counterproductive; recessions have slowed and in some cases derailed efforts to adopt cleaner modes of production. Rather, large leaps in clean technology, triggering a structural shift in the way we produce and consume energy, are required. This is a ‘green growth’ rather than a ‘no growth’ world. The continuation of growth in value to humans is consistent with us living within the material constraints imposed by a finite (if very large) planet, provided that we continue to expand the "intellectual economy" through innovation, technology development, an increased focus on services and, more fundamentally, the art of living, all of which he discusses in the interview below.

Debate about the relationship between environmental limits and economic growth has been taking place for several decades. These arguments have re-emerged with greater intensity following advances in the understanding of the economics of climate change, increases in resource and oil prices and the re-emergence of the discussion about peak oil. These issues are addressed here by Cameron Hepburn, He is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow of New College, Oxford.
According to Professor Hepburn, the economic pessimism created by the great recession of 2008-2012 has put the spotlight back on the prospects for economic growth and invariably, the impact on the impact and climate change. But does the pursuit of growth necessitate a trade-off with the environment. In the interview ,Hepburn offers a conceptual and synthetic analysis of the relationship between economic growth and environmental limits, including those imposed by climate change. It explores two related questions. Will environmental limits, including limits on the climate system, slow or even halt economic growth? If not, how will the nature of economic growth have to shift?
To be clear, Cameron Hepburn does not envisage a ‘zero growth’ world as being necessary for us to live within environmental limits, nor does he see economic growth as a problem. Rather, he maintains that stopping economic growth (which is measured in terms of value) is neither necessary nor desirable. Indeed, as far as meeting environmental challenges is concerned, it would be counterproductive; recessions have slowed and in some cases derailed efforts to adopt cleaner modes of production. Rather, large leaps in clean technology, triggering a structural shift in the way we produce and consume energy, are required. This is a ‘green growth’ rather than a ‘no growth’ world. The continuation of growth in value to humans is consistent with us living within the material constraints imposed by a finite (if very large) planet, provided that we continue to expand the "intellectual economy" through innovation, technology development, an increased focus on services and, more fundamentally, the art of living, all of which he discusses in the interview below.

Modern human civilisation has been built upon energy from carbon-intensive fossil fuels. We are now on the cusp of a once-in-a-civilisation transition to a net...

Modern human civilisation has been built upon energy from carbon-intensive fossil fuels. We are now on the cusp of a once-in-a-civilisation transition to a net zero carbon society. The outcome of this transition could be a world that is cleaner, safer, smarter, more technologically advanced, and more prosperous. Getting there will necessarily involve structural transformation in many economic sectors. But progress to a zero carbon society is far slower than what is required to eliminate even the worst climate risks.
In this talk, ProfessorDoyne Farmer and Professor Cameron Hepburn, Directors of the OxfordMartinProgramme on the Post-Carbon Transition, discuss new research drawing on multiple disciplines to identify the sensitive intervention points where actions can deliver impact at scale and accelerate the achievement of global net-zero emissions. They will consider those with interests in resisting or delaying the transition, including nations, capital and labour at risk of being ‘stranded’. They will discuss a suite of simulation models that could enable richer explorations of the various possible routes to the post-carbon society, and to help identify the sensitive intervention points.
Join in on Twitter #oxmartintalks
Oxford Martin School,
University of Oxford
www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk

Modern human civilisation has been built upon energy from carbon-intensive fossil fuels. We are now on the cusp of a once-in-a-civilisation transition to a net zero carbon society. The outcome of this transition could be a world that is cleaner, safer, smarter, more technologically advanced, and more prosperous. Getting there will necessarily involve structural transformation in many economic sectors. But progress to a zero carbon society is far slower than what is required to eliminate even the worst climate risks.
In this talk, ProfessorDoyne Farmer and Professor Cameron Hepburn, Directors of the OxfordMartinProgramme on the Post-Carbon Transition, discuss new research drawing on multiple disciplines to identify the sensitive intervention points where actions can deliver impact at scale and accelerate the achievement of global net-zero emissions. They will consider those with interests in resisting or delaying the transition, including nations, capital and labour at risk of being ‘stranded’. They will discuss a suite of simulation models that could enable richer explorations of the various possible routes to the post-carbon society, and to help identify the sensitive intervention points.
Join in on Twitter #oxmartintalks
Oxford Martin School,
University of Oxford
www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk

Putting a Price Tag on Pollution - Dr Cameron Hepburn

Pioneering global research commissioned by The ClimateInstitute reveals that Australia's major trading partners have higher direct and indirect carbon pricing ...

Pioneering global research commissioned by The ClimateInstitute reveals that Australia's major trading partners have higher direct and indirect carbon pricing in their electricity generation sectors in order to drive clean energy investments. The report's key author, Dr Cameron Hepburn of Vivid Economics, summarises the findings of this groundbreaking study.

Pioneering global research commissioned by The ClimateInstitute reveals that Australia's major trading partners have higher direct and indirect carbon pricing in their electricity generation sectors in order to drive clean energy investments. The report's key author, Dr Cameron Hepburn of Vivid Economics, summarises the findings of this groundbreaking study.

Cameron Hepburn is co-founder of ClimateBridge, based in London. He is very well known in Europe for his expertise in climate change economics, business and policy. Cameron is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow at New College, Oxford.
Cameron previously worked for McKinsey & Company in Australia and Europe and Shell Australia on environmental management. He serves as a Member of the Economics Advisory Group to the UK Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change, the Academic Panel for UK DEFRA, as a Director of Vivid Economics Ltd, and on several other advisory boards. Cameron holds first class degrees in law and chemical engineering from Melbourne University, and a masters and doctorate in economics from Oxford University, where he studied as a Rhodes Scholar.
He has over 30 peer-reviewed publications in a range of disciplines, reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of the challenges in the resources and energy sectors. He has particular expertise in environmental and climate-change economics, with research interests in the theory and implementation of emissions trading, the economics and ethics of cost-benefit analysis, green growth and behavioural economics.
Cameron has provided advice on energy and environmental policy to governments and international institutions around the world. He is a member of the Economics Advisory Group (with Lord Stern and Professor Helm) to the UK Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change. He served for almost a decade as a member of the Academic Panel, in the UK Department of Environment, Food and RuralAffairs and the Department of Energy and Climate Change. He has advised governments (e.g. China, India, UK, Australia) and international institutions (e.g. OECD, UN organisations) on energy, resources and environmental policy.
He has also had an entrepreneurial career, co-founding two successful environmental businesses and investing in several other start-ups. In 2006, with Alex Wyatt he co-founded Climate Bridge, a developer of clean energy projects in China and around the world, with offices in four countries. Also in 2006, with Robin Smale he co-founded Vivid Economics, a boutique economics consultancy where he has worked with private sector (and government) clients on strategy in relation to market structure and resource, energy and environmental issues. He is an investor in Purpose, a firm that uses digital technology to create mass consumer movements, and DoSustainability, a specialist electronic publisher.
Held at the iconic Sydney Opera House on 14 September, The AdvanceGlobalAustralianSummit and Awards celebrated international Australians who exhibit remarkable talent, exceptional vision and ambition. The Awards are the only of its kind to recognise the contributions of the one million Australians living abroad, and those who have returned home. More information at www.globalaustralianawards.com.
For the 2015 Advance Global Australian Awards and Summit we were delighted to partner with Australia Channel, the international service of Sky News Australia designed to meet the needs of expats wanting the freshest news from home, and to highlight the benefits of Australia as a business, tourism and investment destination. More information at www.australiachannel.com.au.

Cameron Hepburn is co-founder of ClimateBridge, based in London. He is very well known in Europe for his expertise in climate change economics, business and policy. Cameron is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow at New College, Oxford.
Cameron previously worked for McKinsey & Company in Australia and Europe and Shell Australia on environmental management. He serves as a Member of the Economics Advisory Group to the UK Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change, the Academic Panel for UK DEFRA, as a Director of Vivid Economics Ltd, and on several other advisory boards. Cameron holds first class degrees in law and chemical engineering from Melbourne University, and a masters and doctorate in economics from Oxford University, where he studied as a Rhodes Scholar.
He has over 30 peer-reviewed publications in a range of disciplines, reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of the challenges in the resources and energy sectors. He has particular expertise in environmental and climate-change economics, with research interests in the theory and implementation of emissions trading, the economics and ethics of cost-benefit analysis, green growth and behavioural economics.
Cameron has provided advice on energy and environmental policy to governments and international institutions around the world. He is a member of the Economics Advisory Group (with Lord Stern and Professor Helm) to the UK Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change. He served for almost a decade as a member of the Academic Panel, in the UK Department of Environment, Food and RuralAffairs and the Department of Energy and Climate Change. He has advised governments (e.g. China, India, UK, Australia) and international institutions (e.g. OECD, UN organisations) on energy, resources and environmental policy.
He has also had an entrepreneurial career, co-founding two successful environmental businesses and investing in several other start-ups. In 2006, with Alex Wyatt he co-founded Climate Bridge, a developer of clean energy projects in China and around the world, with offices in four countries. Also in 2006, with Robin Smale he co-founded Vivid Economics, a boutique economics consultancy where he has worked with private sector (and government) clients on strategy in relation to market structure and resource, energy and environmental issues. He is an investor in Purpose, a firm that uses digital technology to create mass consumer movements, and DoSustainability, a specialist electronic publisher.
Held at the iconic Sydney Opera House on 14 September, The AdvanceGlobalAustralianSummit and Awards celebrated international Australians who exhibit remarkable talent, exceptional vision and ambition. The Awards are the only of its kind to recognise the contributions of the one million Australians living abroad, and those who have returned home. More information at www.globalaustralianawards.com.
For the 2015 Advance Global Australian Awards and Summit we were delighted to partner with Australia Channel, the international service of Sky News Australia designed to meet the needs of expats wanting the freshest news from home, and to highlight the benefits of Australia as a business, tourism and investment destination. More information at www.australiachannel.com.au.

Audrey Hepburn... by her Son. Part 4 of 4

An intimate portrait of Audrey Hepburn, by her son Sean Hepburn-Ferrer. Featuring many private photographs as well as clips from all her memorable films.
Pleas...

An intimate portrait of Audrey Hepburn, by her son Sean Hepburn-Ferrer. Featuring many private photographs as well as clips from all her memorable films.
Please visit the Youtube channels of my three official web sites on another of Britain's greats, Leonard Rossiter, including the authorised Rising Damp and Reginald Perrin web sites:
http://www.youtube.com/user/OfficialRossiter
http://www.youtube.com/user/leonardross
Please visit my Two Ronnies Youtube channel:
http://www.youtube.com/user/2ronnies

An intimate portrait of Audrey Hepburn, by her son Sean Hepburn-Ferrer. Featuring many private photographs as well as clips from all her memorable films.
Please visit the Youtube channels of my three official web sites on another of Britain's greats, Leonard Rossiter, including the authorised Rising Damp and Reginald Perrin web sites:
http://www.youtube.com/user/OfficialRossiter
http://www.youtube.com/user/leonardross
Please visit my Two Ronnies Youtube channel:
http://www.youtube.com/user/2ronnies

Gwyneth Paltrow as Audrey Hepburn | Max Factor - July 14, 2014

Gwyneth Paltrow: Goop Interview

Cameron Crowe talks about Harvey Weinstein outside of Craigs Restaurant in West Hollywood

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DIRECTED BY JOHN FORD (Interview)

Billy Wilder Remembers Audrey Hepburn 1994

Jay Chandrasekhar Hung Out (Carefully) With Willie Nelson

'Mustache Shenanigans' author Jay Chandrasekhar, who also starred in 'Beerfest' and 'Super Troopers,' reflects on how partying has helped his career in Hollywood
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For most of the world’s toughest challenges, there exists a tension between the needs of an individual and what is best for the common good. Income derived from fishing may be vital to one country’s economy but overfishing depletes stocks to dangerously low levels. Low income countries need to develop in order to lift people out of poverty but this increases demand for fossil fuels at a point where global efforts to reduce carbon emissions have become critically important.
Some of Oxford’s leading thinkers on how to manage global commons and shared resources come to together for a lively panel debate to address the tension between individual rationality and collective responsibility, drawing on examples from the four lectures in this term’s series.
Panellists:
ProfessorIan Goldin, (Chai...

Economic Growth, Climate Change and Environmental Limits

Debate about the relationship between environmental limits and economic growth has been taking place for several decades. These arguments have re-emerged with g...

Debate about the relationship between environmental limits and economic growth has been taking place for several decades. These arguments have re-emerged with greater intensity following advances in the understanding of the economics of climate change, increases in resource and oil prices and the re-emergence of the discussion about peak oil. These issues are addressed here by Cameron Hepburn, He is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow of New College, Oxford.
According to Professor Hepburn, the economic pessimism created by the great recession of 2008-2012 has put the spotlight back on the prospects for economic growth and invariably, the impact on the impact and climate change. But does the pursuit of growth necessitate a trade-off with the environment. In the interview ,Hepburn offers a conceptual and synthetic analysis of the relationship between economic growth and environmental limits, including those imposed by climate change. It explores two related questions. Will environmental limits, including limits on the climate system, slow or even halt economic growth? If not, how will the nature of economic growth have to shift?
To be clear, Cameron Hepburn does not envisage a ‘zero growth’ world as being necessary for us to live within environmental limits, nor does he see economic growth as a problem. Rather, he maintains that stopping economic growth (which is measured in terms of value) is neither necessary nor desirable. Indeed, as far as meeting environmental challenges is concerned, it would be counterproductive; recessions have slowed and in some cases derailed efforts to adopt cleaner modes of production. Rather, large leaps in clean technology, triggering a structural shift in the way we produce and consume energy, are required. This is a ‘green growth’ rather than a ‘no growth’ world. The continuation of growth in value to humans is consistent with us living within the material constraints imposed by a finite (if very large) planet, provided that we continue to expand the "intellectual economy" through innovation, technology development, an increased focus on services and, more fundamentally, the art of living, all of which he discusses in the interview below.

Debate about the relationship between environmental limits and economic growth has been taking place for several decades. These arguments have re-emerged with greater intensity following advances in the understanding of the economics of climate change, increases in resource and oil prices and the re-emergence of the discussion about peak oil. These issues are addressed here by Cameron Hepburn, He is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow of New College, Oxford.
According to Professor Hepburn, the economic pessimism created by the great recession of 2008-2012 has put the spotlight back on the prospects for economic growth and invariably, the impact on the impact and climate change. But does the pursuit of growth necessitate a trade-off with the environment. In the interview ,Hepburn offers a conceptual and synthetic analysis of the relationship between economic growth and environmental limits, including those imposed by climate change. It explores two related questions. Will environmental limits, including limits on the climate system, slow or even halt economic growth? If not, how will the nature of economic growth have to shift?
To be clear, Cameron Hepburn does not envisage a ‘zero growth’ world as being necessary for us to live within environmental limits, nor does he see economic growth as a problem. Rather, he maintains that stopping economic growth (which is measured in terms of value) is neither necessary nor desirable. Indeed, as far as meeting environmental challenges is concerned, it would be counterproductive; recessions have slowed and in some cases derailed efforts to adopt cleaner modes of production. Rather, large leaps in clean technology, triggering a structural shift in the way we produce and consume energy, are required. This is a ‘green growth’ rather than a ‘no growth’ world. The continuation of growth in value to humans is consistent with us living within the material constraints imposed by a finite (if very large) planet, provided that we continue to expand the "intellectual economy" through innovation, technology development, an increased focus on services and, more fundamentally, the art of living, all of which he discusses in the interview below.

Cameron Hepburn is co-founder of ClimateBridge, based in London. He is very well known in Europe for his expertise in climate change economics, business and policy. Cameron is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow at New College, Oxford.
Cameron previously worked for McKinsey & Company in Australia and Europe and Shell Australia on environmental management. He serves as a Member of the Economics Advisory Group to the UK Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change, the Academic Panel for UK DEFRA, as a Director of Vivid Economics Ltd, and on several other advisory boards. Cameron holds first class degrees in law and chemical engineering from Melbourne University, and a masters and doctorate in economics from Oxford University, where he studied as a Rhodes Scholar.
He has over 30 peer-reviewed publications in a range of disciplines, reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of the challenges in the resources and energy sectors. He has particular expertise in environmental and climate-change economics, with research interests in the theory and implementation of emissions trading, the economics and ethics of cost-benefit analysis, green growth and behavioural economics.
Cameron has provided advice on energy and environmental policy to governments and international institutions around the world. He is a member of the Economics Advisory Group (with Lord Stern and Professor Helm) to the UK Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change. He served for almost a decade as a member of the Academic Panel, in the UK Department of Environment, Food and RuralAffairs and the Department of Energy and Climate Change. He has advised governments (e.g. China, India, UK, Australia) and international institutions (e.g. OECD, UN organisations) on energy, resources and environmental policy.
He has also had an entrepreneurial career, co-founding two successful environmental businesses and investing in several other start-ups. In 2006, with Alex Wyatt he co-founded Climate Bridge, a developer of clean energy projects in China and around the world, with offices in four countries. Also in 2006, with Robin Smale he co-founded Vivid Economics, a boutique economics consultancy where he has worked with private sector (and government) clients on strategy in relation to market structure and resource, energy and environmental issues. He is an investor in Purpose, a firm that uses digital technology to create mass consumer movements, and DoSustainability, a specialist electronic publisher.
Held at the iconic Sydney Opera House on 14 September, The AdvanceGlobalAustralianSummit and Awards celebrated international Australians who exhibit remarkable talent, exceptional vision and ambition. The Awards are the only of its kind to recognise the contributions of the one million Australians living abroad, and those who have returned home. More information at www.globalaustralianawards.com.
For the 2015 Advance Global Australian Awards and Summit we were delighted to partner with Australia Channel, the international service of Sky News Australia designed to meet the needs of expats wanting the freshest news from home, and to highlight the benefits of Australia as a business, tourism and investment destination. More information at www.australiachannel.com.au.

Cameron Hepburn is co-founder of ClimateBridge, based in London. He is very well known in Europe for his expertise in climate change economics, business and policy. Cameron is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow at New College, Oxford.
Cameron previously worked for McKinsey & Company in Australia and Europe and Shell Australia on environmental management. He serves as a Member of the Economics Advisory Group to the UK Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change, the Academic Panel for UK DEFRA, as a Director of Vivid Economics Ltd, and on several other advisory boards. Cameron holds first class degrees in law and chemical engineering from Melbourne University, and a masters and doctorate in economics from Oxford University, where he studied as a Rhodes Scholar.
He has over 30 peer-reviewed publications in a range of disciplines, reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of the challenges in the resources and energy sectors. He has particular expertise in environmental and climate-change economics, with research interests in the theory and implementation of emissions trading, the economics and ethics of cost-benefit analysis, green growth and behavioural economics.
Cameron has provided advice on energy and environmental policy to governments and international institutions around the world. He is a member of the Economics Advisory Group (with Lord Stern and Professor Helm) to the UK Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change. He served for almost a decade as a member of the Academic Panel, in the UK Department of Environment, Food and RuralAffairs and the Department of Energy and Climate Change. He has advised governments (e.g. China, India, UK, Australia) and international institutions (e.g. OECD, UN organisations) on energy, resources and environmental policy.
He has also had an entrepreneurial career, co-founding two successful environmental businesses and investing in several other start-ups. In 2006, with Alex Wyatt he co-founded Climate Bridge, a developer of clean energy projects in China and around the world, with offices in four countries. Also in 2006, with Robin Smale he co-founded Vivid Economics, a boutique economics consultancy where he has worked with private sector (and government) clients on strategy in relation to market structure and resource, energy and environmental issues. He is an investor in Purpose, a firm that uses digital technology to create mass consumer movements, and DoSustainability, a specialist electronic publisher.
Held at the iconic Sydney Opera House on 14 September, The AdvanceGlobalAustralianSummit and Awards celebrated international Australians who exhibit remarkable talent, exceptional vision and ambition. The Awards are the only of its kind to recognise the contributions of the one million Australians living abroad, and those who have returned home. More information at www.globalaustralianawards.com.
For the 2015 Advance Global Australian Awards and Summit we were delighted to partner with Australia Channel, the international service of Sky News Australia designed to meet the needs of expats wanting the freshest news from home, and to highlight the benefits of Australia as a business, tourism and investment destination. More information at www.australiachannel.com.au.

On 23 September1988, Dutch news magazine Jongbloed & Joosten broadcasted this behind the scenes report on the UnicefDanny KayeAward, a songcontest for children, that was broadcasted by TROS television on 5 October 1988. Audrey Hepburn, who hosted the event, can be seen rehearsing with amongst others Julien Clerc from France and Udo Jürgens from Austria. Audrey Hepburn is also being interviewed in Dutch, below is a transcription of the interview (Dutch spoken, no subtitles).
Announcer: Ladies and gentlemen, your host bla-bla-bla... Audrey Hepburn. Quiet please, we're rehearsing!
Audrey Hepburn: I'm not there yet!
Audrey Hepburn: I think it is very exciting, and a bit scary. There is never enough time to rehearse, like for a movie or in the theatre. It is completely different.
Journalist: During the gala you are performing a song with Paul van Vliet. Why did you choose him?
Audrey Hepburn: First, I am not singing. It started when this evening was being organized, and I had seen Paul van Vliet on television but never in the theatre. Much to my regret, I hope I will see him perform one of these days. I think he is fantastic, a great performer, full with warmth, humanity and humour, a rare combination. I do very little...
Journalist: You're being to modest!
Audrey Hepburn: ...it is his song, and I make a small contribution but I love to do it, really nice.
Journalist: Tonight children compete for the Danny Kaye Award, what kind of award is it?
Audrey Hepburn: The award is for the poem or song that best represents the needs of children in the world.
Journalist: Final question, the gala is being held here in the Netherlands. How do you feel, being here again?
Audrey Hepburn: Wonderful, wonderful. I love Holland very much, I am very attached to Holland and I am very proud of Holland. So I am really happy to be here again.

On 23 September1988, Dutch news magazine Jongbloed & Joosten broadcasted this behind the scenes report on the UnicefDanny KayeAward, a songcontest for children, that was broadcasted by TROS television on 5 October 1988. Audrey Hepburn, who hosted the event, can be seen rehearsing with amongst others Julien Clerc from France and Udo Jürgens from Austria. Audrey Hepburn is also being interviewed in Dutch, below is a transcription of the interview (Dutch spoken, no subtitles).
Announcer: Ladies and gentlemen, your host bla-bla-bla... Audrey Hepburn. Quiet please, we're rehearsing!
Audrey Hepburn: I'm not there yet!
Audrey Hepburn: I think it is very exciting, and a bit scary. There is never enough time to rehearse, like for a movie or in the theatre. It is completely different.
Journalist: During the gala you are performing a song with Paul van Vliet. Why did you choose him?
Audrey Hepburn: First, I am not singing. It started when this evening was being organized, and I had seen Paul van Vliet on television but never in the theatre. Much to my regret, I hope I will see him perform one of these days. I think he is fantastic, a great performer, full with warmth, humanity and humour, a rare combination. I do very little...
Journalist: You're being to modest!
Audrey Hepburn: ...it is his song, and I make a small contribution but I love to do it, really nice.
Journalist: Tonight children compete for the Danny Kaye Award, what kind of award is it?
Audrey Hepburn: The award is for the poem or song that best represents the needs of children in the world.
Journalist: Final question, the gala is being held here in the Netherlands. How do you feel, being here again?
Audrey Hepburn: Wonderful, wonderful. I love Holland very much, I am very attached to Holland and I am very proud of Holland. So I am really happy to be here again.

Cameron Crowe talks about Harvey Weinstein outside of Craigs Restaurant in West Hollywood

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Re-posting this video without are permission will result in legal action.

PLEASE FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @Hollywood2YouTV and subscribe to our Youtube channel. Also please check out www.GotPap.com
Are you a website or blog and want to use this video on your website or blog. If so please email sales@hollywoodtoyou.com
Re-posting this video without are permission will result in legal action.

'Mustache Shenanigans' author Jay Chandrasekhar, who also starred in 'Beerfest' and 'Super Troopers,' reflects on how partying has helped his career in Hollywood
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The Late Show with Stephen Colbert is the premier late night talk show on CBS, airing at 11:35pm EST, streaming online via CBS All Access, and delivered to the International Space Station on a USB drive taped to a weather balloon. Every night, viewers can expect: Comedy, humor, funny moments, witty interviews, celebrities, famous people, movie stars, bits, humorous celebrities doing bits, funny celebs, big group photos of every star from Hollywood, even the reclusive ones, plus also jokes.

'Mustache Shenanigans' author Jay Chandrasekhar, who also starred in 'Beerfest' and 'Super Troopers,' reflects on how partying has helped his career in Hollywood
Subscribe To "The Late Show" Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/ColbertYouTube
For more content from "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert", click HERE: http://bit.ly/1AKISnR
Watch full episodes of "The Late Show" HERE: http://bit.ly/1Puei40
Like "The Late Show" on Facebook HERE: http://on.fb.me/1df139Y
Follow "The Late Show" on Twitter HERE: http://bit.ly/1dMzZzG
Follow "The Late Show" on Google+ HERE: http://bit.ly/1JlGgzw
Follow "The Late Show" on Instagram HERE: http://bit.ly/29wfREj
Follow "The Late Show" on Tumblr HERE: http://bit.ly/29DVvtR
Watch The Late Show with Stephen Colbert weeknights at 11:35 PM ET/10:35 PM CT. Only on CBS.
Get the CBS app for iPhone & iPad! Click HERE: http://bit.ly/12rLxge
Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream live TV, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! http://bit.ly/1OQA29B
---
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert is the premier late night talk show on CBS, airing at 11:35pm EST, streaming online via CBS All Access, and delivered to the International Space Station on a USB drive taped to a weather balloon. Every night, viewers can expect: Comedy, humor, funny moments, witty interviews, celebrities, famous people, movie stars, bits, humorous celebrities doing bits, funny celebs, big group photos of every star from Hollywood, even the reclusive ones, plus also jokes.

Modern human civilisation has been built upon energy from carbon-intensive fossil fuels. We are now on the cusp of a once-in-a-civilisation transition to a net zero carbon society. The outcome of this transition could be a world that is cleaner, safer, smarter, more technologically advanced, and more prosperous. Getting there will necessarily involve structural transformation in many economic sectors. But progress to a zero carbon society is far slower than what is required to eliminate even the worst climate risks.
In this talk, ProfessorDoyne Farmer and Professor Cameron Hepburn, Directors of the OxfordMartinProgramme on the Post-Carbon Transition, discuss new research drawing on multiple disciplines to identify the sensitive intervention points where actions can deliver impact at s...

Children of austerity: impact of the great recession on child poverty in rich countries

The 2008 financial crisis triggered the first contraction of the world economy in the post-war era. Children and young people, already at a greater risk of poverty than the population as a whole, were among the main victims of the crisis and ensuing austerity in advanced economies, and the countries most severely affected recorded some of the largest increases in child poverty.
In this book talk, ProfessorBrian Nolan, Director of the OxfordMartinProgramme on Inequality and Prosperity, will discuss the lessons to be learned from examining how the crisis impacted on children across a variety of rich countries, and give his perspective on how to protect children more effectively from future economic crisis.
About the speaker
Brian Nolan is Director of the Oxford Martin Programme on Inequ...

For most of the world’s toughest challenges, there exists a tension between the needs of an individual and what is best for the common good. Income derived from fishing may be vital to one country’s economy but overfishing depletes stocks to dangerously low levels. Low income countries need to develop in order to lift people out of poverty but this increases demand for fossil fuels at a point where global efforts to reduce carbon emissions have become critically important.
Some of Oxford’s leading thinkers on how to manage global commons and shared resources come to together for a lively panel debate to address the tension between individual rationality and collective responsibility, drawing on examples from the four lectures in this term’s series.
Panellists:
ProfessorIan Goldin, (Chai...

A Bátyám cipőjében

Economic Growth, Climate Change and Environmental Limits

Debate about the relationship between environmental limits and economic growth has been taking place for several decades. These arguments have re-emerged with g...

Debate about the relationship between environmental limits and economic growth has been taking place for several decades. These arguments have re-emerged with greater intensity following advances in the understanding of the economics of climate change, increases in resource and oil prices and the re-emergence of the discussion about peak oil. These issues are addressed here by Cameron Hepburn, He is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow of New College, Oxford.
According to Professor Hepburn, the economic pessimism created by the great recession of 2008-2012 has put the spotlight back on the prospects for economic growth and invariably, the impact on the impact and climate change. But does the pursuit of growth necessitate a trade-off with the environment. In the interview ,Hepburn offers a conceptual and synthetic analysis of the relationship between economic growth and environmental limits, including those imposed by climate change. It explores two related questions. Will environmental limits, including limits on the climate system, slow or even halt economic growth? If not, how will the nature of economic growth have to shift?
To be clear, Cameron Hepburn does not envisage a ‘zero growth’ world as being necessary for us to live within environmental limits, nor does he see economic growth as a problem. Rather, he maintains that stopping economic growth (which is measured in terms of value) is neither necessary nor desirable. Indeed, as far as meeting environmental challenges is concerned, it would be counterproductive; recessions have slowed and in some cases derailed efforts to adopt cleaner modes of production. Rather, large leaps in clean technology, triggering a structural shift in the way we produce and consume energy, are required. This is a ‘green growth’ rather than a ‘no growth’ world. The continuation of growth in value to humans is consistent with us living within the material constraints imposed by a finite (if very large) planet, provided that we continue to expand the "intellectual economy" through innovation, technology development, an increased focus on services and, more fundamentally, the art of living, all of which he discusses in the interview below.

Debate about the relationship between environmental limits and economic growth has been taking place for several decades. These arguments have re-emerged with greater intensity following advances in the understanding of the economics of climate change, increases in resource and oil prices and the re-emergence of the discussion about peak oil. These issues are addressed here by Cameron Hepburn, He is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow of New College, Oxford.
According to Professor Hepburn, the economic pessimism created by the great recession of 2008-2012 has put the spotlight back on the prospects for economic growth and invariably, the impact on the impact and climate change. But does the pursuit of growth necessitate a trade-off with the environment. In the interview ,Hepburn offers a conceptual and synthetic analysis of the relationship between economic growth and environmental limits, including those imposed by climate change. It explores two related questions. Will environmental limits, including limits on the climate system, slow or even halt economic growth? If not, how will the nature of economic growth have to shift?
To be clear, Cameron Hepburn does not envisage a ‘zero growth’ world as being necessary for us to live within environmental limits, nor does he see economic growth as a problem. Rather, he maintains that stopping economic growth (which is measured in terms of value) is neither necessary nor desirable. Indeed, as far as meeting environmental challenges is concerned, it would be counterproductive; recessions have slowed and in some cases derailed efforts to adopt cleaner modes of production. Rather, large leaps in clean technology, triggering a structural shift in the way we produce and consume energy, are required. This is a ‘green growth’ rather than a ‘no growth’ world. The continuation of growth in value to humans is consistent with us living within the material constraints imposed by a finite (if very large) planet, provided that we continue to expand the "intellectual economy" through innovation, technology development, an increased focus on services and, more fundamentally, the art of living, all of which he discusses in the interview below.

Modern human civilisation has been built upon energy from carbon-intensive fossil fuels. We are now on the cusp of a once-in-a-civilisation transition to a net...

Modern human civilisation has been built upon energy from carbon-intensive fossil fuels. We are now on the cusp of a once-in-a-civilisation transition to a net zero carbon society. The outcome of this transition could be a world that is cleaner, safer, smarter, more technologically advanced, and more prosperous. Getting there will necessarily involve structural transformation in many economic sectors. But progress to a zero carbon society is far slower than what is required to eliminate even the worst climate risks.
In this talk, ProfessorDoyne Farmer and Professor Cameron Hepburn, Directors of the OxfordMartinProgramme on the Post-Carbon Transition, discuss new research drawing on multiple disciplines to identify the sensitive intervention points where actions can deliver impact at scale and accelerate the achievement of global net-zero emissions. They will consider those with interests in resisting or delaying the transition, including nations, capital and labour at risk of being ‘stranded’. They will discuss a suite of simulation models that could enable richer explorations of the various possible routes to the post-carbon society, and to help identify the sensitive intervention points.
Join in on Twitter #oxmartintalks
Oxford Martin School,
University of Oxford
www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk

Modern human civilisation has been built upon energy from carbon-intensive fossil fuels. We are now on the cusp of a once-in-a-civilisation transition to a net zero carbon society. The outcome of this transition could be a world that is cleaner, safer, smarter, more technologically advanced, and more prosperous. Getting there will necessarily involve structural transformation in many economic sectors. But progress to a zero carbon society is far slower than what is required to eliminate even the worst climate risks.
In this talk, ProfessorDoyne Farmer and Professor Cameron Hepburn, Directors of the OxfordMartinProgramme on the Post-Carbon Transition, discuss new research drawing on multiple disciplines to identify the sensitive intervention points where actions can deliver impact at scale and accelerate the achievement of global net-zero emissions. They will consider those with interests in resisting or delaying the transition, including nations, capital and labour at risk of being ‘stranded’. They will discuss a suite of simulation models that could enable richer explorations of the various possible routes to the post-carbon society, and to help identify the sensitive intervention points.
Join in on Twitter #oxmartintalks
Oxford Martin School,
University of Oxford
www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk

Children of austerity: impact of the great recession on child poverty in rich countries

The 2008 financial crisis triggered the first contraction of the world economy in the post-war era. Children and young people, already at a greater risk of pove...

The 2008 financial crisis triggered the first contraction of the world economy in the post-war era. Children and young people, already at a greater risk of poverty than the population as a whole, were among the main victims of the crisis and ensuing austerity in advanced economies, and the countries most severely affected recorded some of the largest increases in child poverty.
In this book talk, ProfessorBrian Nolan, Director of the OxfordMartinProgramme on Inequality and Prosperity, will discuss the lessons to be learned from examining how the crisis impacted on children across a variety of rich countries, and give his perspective on how to protect children more effectively from future economic crisis.
About the speaker
Brian Nolan is Director of the Oxford Martin Programme on Inequality and Prosperity; Director of the Employment, Equity and Growth Programme at the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School; and Professor of Social Policy at the University of Oxford. He was previously Principal of the College of Human Sciences and Professor of Public Policy at University College Dublin.
His main areas of research are income inequality, poverty, and the economics of social policy. Recent research has focused on trends in income inequality and their societal impacts, the distributional effects of the economic crisis, social inclusion in the EU, top incomes, deprivation and multiple disadvantage, and tax/welfare reform. He has been centrally involved in a range of collaborative cross-country research networks and projects, most recently the Growing Inequalities’ Impacts (GINI) multi-country research project on inequalities and their impacts funded by the EU’sFramework Programme 7.
Recent books include The Handbook of Economic Inequality (2008) which he co-edited with Wiemer Salverda and Tim Smeeding, Poverty and Deprivation in Europe (2011) co-authored with Christopher T. Whelan, The Great Recession and the Distribution of Household Income (2013), edited with Stephen Jenkins, Andrea Brandolini and John Micklewright, and two co-edited volumes from the GINI project in 2013.
About the book:
The 2008 financial crisis triggered the worst global recession since the Great Depression. Many OECD countries responded to the crisis by reducing social spending. Through 11 diverse country case studies (Belgium, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom, and the United States), the book, Children of Austerity: Impact of the Great Recession on Child Poverty in RichCountries, describes the evolution of child poverty and material well-being during the crisis, and links these outcomes with the responses by governments.
The analysis underlines that countries with fragmented social protection systems were less able to protect the incomes of households with children at the time when unemployment soared. In contrast, countries with more comprehensive social protection cushioned the impact of the crisis on households with children, especially if they had implemented fiscal stimulus packages at the onset of the crisis. Although the macroeconomic 'shock' itself and the starting positions differed greatly across countries, while the responses by governments covered a very wide range of policy levers and varied with their circumstances, cuts in social spending and tax increases often played a major role in the impact that the crisis had on the living standards of families and children.
Oxford Martin School,
University of Oxford
www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk

The 2008 financial crisis triggered the first contraction of the world economy in the post-war era. Children and young people, already at a greater risk of poverty than the population as a whole, were among the main victims of the crisis and ensuing austerity in advanced economies, and the countries most severely affected recorded some of the largest increases in child poverty.
In this book talk, ProfessorBrian Nolan, Director of the OxfordMartinProgramme on Inequality and Prosperity, will discuss the lessons to be learned from examining how the crisis impacted on children across a variety of rich countries, and give his perspective on how to protect children more effectively from future economic crisis.
About the speaker
Brian Nolan is Director of the Oxford Martin Programme on Inequality and Prosperity; Director of the Employment, Equity and Growth Programme at the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School; and Professor of Social Policy at the University of Oxford. He was previously Principal of the College of Human Sciences and Professor of Public Policy at University College Dublin.
His main areas of research are income inequality, poverty, and the economics of social policy. Recent research has focused on trends in income inequality and their societal impacts, the distributional effects of the economic crisis, social inclusion in the EU, top incomes, deprivation and multiple disadvantage, and tax/welfare reform. He has been centrally involved in a range of collaborative cross-country research networks and projects, most recently the Growing Inequalities’ Impacts (GINI) multi-country research project on inequalities and their impacts funded by the EU’sFramework Programme 7.
Recent books include The Handbook of Economic Inequality (2008) which he co-edited with Wiemer Salverda and Tim Smeeding, Poverty and Deprivation in Europe (2011) co-authored with Christopher T. Whelan, The Great Recession and the Distribution of Household Income (2013), edited with Stephen Jenkins, Andrea Brandolini and John Micklewright, and two co-edited volumes from the GINI project in 2013.
About the book:
The 2008 financial crisis triggered the worst global recession since the Great Depression. Many OECD countries responded to the crisis by reducing social spending. Through 11 diverse country case studies (Belgium, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom, and the United States), the book, Children of Austerity: Impact of the Great Recession on Child Poverty in RichCountries, describes the evolution of child poverty and material well-being during the crisis, and links these outcomes with the responses by governments.
The analysis underlines that countries with fragmented social protection systems were less able to protect the incomes of households with children at the time when unemployment soared. In contrast, countries with more comprehensive social protection cushioned the impact of the crisis on households with children, especially if they had implemented fiscal stimulus packages at the onset of the crisis. Although the macroeconomic 'shock' itself and the starting positions differed greatly across countries, while the responses by governments covered a very wide range of policy levers and varied with their circumstances, cuts in social spending and tax increases often played a major role in the impact that the crisis had on the living standards of families and children.
Oxford Martin School,
University of Oxford
www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk

Economic Growth, Climate Change and Environmental Limits

Debate about the relationship between environmental limits and economic growth has been taking place for several decades. These arguments have re-emerged with greater intensity following advances in the understanding of the economics of climate change, increases in resource and oil prices and the re-emergence of the discussion about peak oil. These issues are addressed here by Cameron Hepburn, He is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow of New College, Oxford.
According to Professor Hepburn, the economic pessimism created by the great recession of 2008-2012 has put the spotlight back on the prospects for economic growth and invariably, the impact on the impact and climate change. But does the pursuit of growth necessitate a trade-off with the environment. In the interview ,Hepburn offers a conceptual and synthetic analysis of the relationship between economic growth and environmental limits, including those imposed by climate change. It explores two related questions. Will environmental limits, including limits on the climate system, slow or even halt economic growth? If not, how will the nature of economic growth have to shift?
To be clear, Cameron Hepburn does not envisage a ‘zero growth’ world as being necessary for us to live within environmental limits, nor does he see economic growth as a problem. Rather, he maintains that stopping economic growth (which is measured in terms of value) is neither necessary nor desirable. Indeed, as far as meeting environmental challenges is concerned, it would be counterproductive; recessions have slowed and in some cases derailed efforts to adopt cleaner modes of production. Rather, large leaps in clean technology, triggering a structural shift in the way we produce and consume energy, are required. This is a ‘green growth’ rather than a ‘no growth’ world. The continuation of growth in value to humans is consistent with us living within the material constraints imposed by a finite (if very large) planet, provided that we continue to expand the "intellectual economy" through innovation, technology development, an increased focus on services and, more fundamentally, the art of living, all of which he discusses in the interview below.

Modern human civilisation has been built upon energy from carbon-intensive fossil fuels. We are now on the cusp of a once-in-a-civilisation transition to a net zero carbon society. The outcome of this transition could be a world that is cleaner, safer, smarter, more technologically advanced, and more prosperous. Getting there will necessarily involve structural transformation in many economic sectors. But progress to a zero carbon society is far slower than what is required to eliminate even the worst climate risks.
In this talk, ProfessorDoyne Farmer and Professor Cameron Hepburn, Directors of the OxfordMartinProgramme on the Post-Carbon Transition, discuss new research drawing on multiple disciplines to identify the sensitive intervention points where actions can deliver impact at scale and accelerate the achievement of global net-zero emissions. They will consider those with interests in resisting or delaying the transition, including nations, capital and labour at risk of being ‘stranded’. They will discuss a suite of simulation models that could enable richer explorations of the various possible routes to the post-carbon society, and to help identify the sensitive intervention points.
Join in on Twitter #oxmartintalks
Oxford Martin School,
University of Oxford
www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk

Putting a Price Tag on Pollution - Dr Cameron Hepburn

Pioneering global research commissioned by The ClimateInstitute reveals that Australia's major trading partners have higher direct and indirect carbon pricing in their electricity generation sectors in order to drive clean energy investments. The report's key author, Dr Cameron Hepburn of Vivid Economics, summarises the findings of this groundbreaking study.

Cameron Hepburn is co-founder of ClimateBridge, based in London. He is very well known in Europe for his expertise in climate change economics, business and policy. Cameron is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow at New College, Oxford.
Cameron previously worked for McKinsey & Company in Australia and Europe and Shell Australia on environmental management. He serves as a Member of the Economics Advisory Group to the UK Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change, the Academic Panel for UK DEFRA, as a Director of Vivid Economics Ltd, and on several other advisory boards. Cameron holds first class degrees in law and chemical engineering from Melbourne University, and a masters and doctorate in economics from Oxford University, where he studied as a Rhodes Scholar.
He has over 30 peer-reviewed publications in a range of disciplines, reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of the challenges in the resources and energy sectors. He has particular expertise in environmental and climate-change economics, with research interests in the theory and implementation of emissions trading, the economics and ethics of cost-benefit analysis, green growth and behavioural economics.
Cameron has provided advice on energy and environmental policy to governments and international institutions around the world. He is a member of the Economics Advisory Group (with Lord Stern and Professor Helm) to the UK Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change. He served for almost a decade as a member of the Academic Panel, in the UK Department of Environment, Food and RuralAffairs and the Department of Energy and Climate Change. He has advised governments (e.g. China, India, UK, Australia) and international institutions (e.g. OECD, UN organisations) on energy, resources and environmental policy.
He has also had an entrepreneurial career, co-founding two successful environmental businesses and investing in several other start-ups. In 2006, with Alex Wyatt he co-founded Climate Bridge, a developer of clean energy projects in China and around the world, with offices in four countries. Also in 2006, with Robin Smale he co-founded Vivid Economics, a boutique economics consultancy where he has worked with private sector (and government) clients on strategy in relation to market structure and resource, energy and environmental issues. He is an investor in Purpose, a firm that uses digital technology to create mass consumer movements, and DoSustainability, a specialist electronic publisher.
Held at the iconic Sydney Opera House on 14 September, The AdvanceGlobalAustralianSummit and Awards celebrated international Australians who exhibit remarkable talent, exceptional vision and ambition. The Awards are the only of its kind to recognise the contributions of the one million Australians living abroad, and those who have returned home. More information at www.globalaustralianawards.com.
For the 2015 Advance Global Australian Awards and Summit we were delighted to partner with Australia Channel, the international service of Sky News Australia designed to meet the needs of expats wanting the freshest news from home, and to highlight the benefits of Australia as a business, tourism and investment destination. More information at www.australiachannel.com.au.

Audrey Hepburn... by her Son. Part 4 of 4

An intimate portrait of Audrey Hepburn, by her son Sean Hepburn-Ferrer. Featuring many private photographs as well as clips from all her memorable films.
Please visit the Youtube channels of my three official web sites on another of Britain's greats, Leonard Rossiter, including the authorised Rising Damp and Reginald Perrin web sites:
http://www.youtube.com/user/OfficialRossiter
http://www.youtube.com/user/leonardross
Please visit my Two Ronnies Youtube channel:
http://www.youtube.com/user/2ronnies

Economic Growth, Climate Change and Environmental Limits

Debate about the relationship between environmental limits and economic growth has been taking place for several decades. These arguments have re-emerged with greater intensity following advances in the understanding of the economics of climate change, increases in resource and oil prices and the re-emergence of the discussion about peak oil. These issues are addressed here by Cameron Hepburn, He is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow of New College, Oxford.
According to Professor Hepburn, the economic pessimism created by the great recession of 2008-2012 has put the spotlight back on the prospects for economic growth and invariably, the impact on the impact and climate change. But does the pursuit of growth necessitate a trade-off with the environment. In the interview ,Hepburn offers a conceptual and synthetic analysis of the relationship between economic growth and environmental limits, including those imposed by climate change. It explores two related questions. Will environmental limits, including limits on the climate system, slow or even halt economic growth? If not, how will the nature of economic growth have to shift?
To be clear, Cameron Hepburn does not envisage a ‘zero growth’ world as being necessary for us to live within environmental limits, nor does he see economic growth as a problem. Rather, he maintains that stopping economic growth (which is measured in terms of value) is neither necessary nor desirable. Indeed, as far as meeting environmental challenges is concerned, it would be counterproductive; recessions have slowed and in some cases derailed efforts to adopt cleaner modes of production. Rather, large leaps in clean technology, triggering a structural shift in the way we produce and consume energy, are required. This is a ‘green growth’ rather than a ‘no growth’ world. The continuation of growth in value to humans is consistent with us living within the material constraints imposed by a finite (if very large) planet, provided that we continue to expand the "intellectual economy" through innovation, technology development, an increased focus on services and, more fundamentally, the art of living, all of which he discusses in the interview below.

1:24

Cameron Crowe on Audrey Hepburn

In this clip from the AFI Archives, Director Cameron Crowe talks about Audrey Hepburn as a...

Cameron Hepburn is co-founder of ClimateBridge, based in London. He is very well known in Europe for his expertise in climate change economics, business and policy. Cameron is Professor of environmental economics at the University of Oxford, based at the Smith School and the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and is also Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow at New College, Oxford.
Cameron previously worked for McKinsey & Company in Australia and Europe and Shell Australia on environmental management. He serves as a Member of the Economics Advisory Group to the UK Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change, the Academic Panel for UK DEFRA, as a Director of Vivid Economics Ltd, and on several other advisory boards. Cameron holds first class degrees in law and chemical engineering from Melbourne University, and a masters and doctorate in economics from Oxford University, where he studied as a Rhodes Scholar.
He has over 30 peer-reviewed publications in a range of disciplines, reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of the challenges in the resources and energy sectors. He has particular expertise in environmental and climate-change economics, with research interests in the theory and implementation of emissions trading, the economics and ethics of cost-benefit analysis, green growth and behavioural economics.
Cameron has provided advice on energy and environmental policy to governments and international institutions around the world. He is a member of the Economics Advisory Group (with Lord Stern and Professor Helm) to the UK Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change. He served for almost a decade as a member of the Academic Panel, in the UK Department of Environment, Food and RuralAffairs and the Department of Energy and Climate Change. He has advised governments (e.g. China, India, UK, Australia) and international institutions (e.g. OECD, UN organisations) on energy, resources and environmental policy.
He has also had an entrepreneurial career, co-founding two successful environmental businesses and investing in several other start-ups. In 2006, with Alex Wyatt he co-founded Climate Bridge, a developer of clean energy projects in China and around the world, with offices in four countries. Also in 2006, with Robin Smale he co-founded Vivid Economics, a boutique economics consultancy where he has worked with private sector (and government) clients on strategy in relation to market structure and resource, energy and environmental issues. He is an investor in Purpose, a firm that uses digital technology to create mass consumer movements, and DoSustainability, a specialist electronic publisher.
Held at the iconic Sydney Opera House on 14 September, The AdvanceGlobalAustralianSummit and Awards celebrated international Australians who exhibit remarkable talent, exceptional vision and ambition. The Awards are the only of its kind to recognise the contributions of the one million Australians living abroad, and those who have returned home. More information at www.globalaustralianawards.com.
For the 2015 Advance Global Australian Awards and Summit we were delighted to partner with Australia Channel, the international service of Sky News Australia designed to meet the needs of expats wanting the freshest news from home, and to highlight the benefits of Australia as a business, tourism and investment destination. More information at www.australiachannel.com.au.

Audrey Hepburn interview in Dutch for Jongbloed & Joosten

On 23 September1988, Dutch news magazine Jongbloed & Joosten broadcasted this behind the scenes report on the UnicefDanny KayeAward, a songcontest for children, that was broadcasted by TROS television on 5 October 1988. Audrey Hepburn, who hosted the event, can be seen rehearsing with amongst others Julien Clerc from France and Udo Jürgens from Austria. Audrey Hepburn is also being interviewed in Dutch, below is a transcription of the interview (Dutch spoken, no subtitles).
Announcer: Ladies and gentlemen, your host bla-bla-bla... Audrey Hepburn. Quiet please, we're rehearsing!
Audrey Hepburn: I'm not there yet!
Audrey Hepburn: I think it is very exciting, and a bit scary. There is never enough time to rehearse, like for a movie or in the theatre. It is completely different.
Journalist: During the gala you are performing a song with Paul van Vliet. Why did you choose him?
Audrey Hepburn: First, I am not singing. It started when this evening was being organized, and I had seen Paul van Vliet on television but never in the theatre. Much to my regret, I hope I will see him perform one of these days. I think he is fantastic, a great performer, full with warmth, humanity and humour, a rare combination. I do very little...
Journalist: You're being to modest!
Audrey Hepburn: ...it is his song, and I make a small contribution but I love to do it, really nice.
Journalist: Tonight children compete for the Danny Kaye Award, what kind of award is it?
Audrey Hepburn: The award is for the poem or song that best represents the needs of children in the world.
Journalist: Final question, the gala is being held here in the Netherlands. How do you feel, being here again?
Audrey Hepburn: Wonderful, wonderful. I love Holland very much, I am very attached to Holland and I am very proud of Holland. So I am really happy to be here again.

Cameron Crowe talks about Harvey Weinstein outside of Craigs Restaurant in West Hollywood

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4:13

Cameron Mitchell - Director John Ford

Renown stage, film and television character actor Cameron Mitchell reflects back on his wo...